


Product Description Before FINDING NEMO, MONSTERS, INC. and CARS, the creative minds of Disney/Pixar introduced you to TOY STORY and an astonishing world where toys play while their owners are away. Rediscover acclaimed filmmaker John Lasseter's directorial debut with Woody (Tom Hanks), Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) and all their friends in an adventure filled with humor, heart and friendship -- in a must-have Special Edition. This groundbreaking computer-generated classic started it all and set the stage for the equally amazing TOY STORY 2. Enjoy all-new bonus features -- including an exclusive sneak peek at TOY STORY 3, the next chapter of this exciting adventure. It's nonstop fun for the entire family!|Released in 1995, it's the first movie generated completely on computers.|It took 300 networked Sun workstations approximately 800,000 hours of computing time to complete this film. Each sixteenth of a second frame contains about 300 megabytes of information.|Early in the movie, director John Lasseter's name is visible on the spine of the book "Tin Toy" on a bookshelf behind Woody.|With worldwide box office receipts of $360 million, the film ranks as the third highest-grossing animated film of all time behind THE LION KING and ALADDIN desertcart.com There is greatness in film that can be discussed, dissected, and talked about late into the night. Then there is genius that is right in front of our faces--we smile at the spell it puts us into and are refreshed, and nary a word needs to be spoken. This kind of entertainment is what they used to call "movie magic," and there is loads of it in this irresistible computer animation feature. Just a picture of these bright toys reawaken the kid in us. Filmmaker John Lasseter thinks of himself as a storyteller first and an animator second, much like another film innovator, Walt Disney.Lasseter's story is universal and magical: what do toys do when they're not played with? Cowboy Woody (voiced by Tom Hanks), Andy's favorite bedroom toy, tries to calm the other toys (some original, some classic) during a wrenching time of year--the birthday party, when newer toys may replace them. Sure enough, Space Ranger Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) is the new toy that takes over the throne. Buzz has a crucial flaw, though--he believes he's the real Buzz Lightyear, not a toy. Lasseter further scores with perfect voice casting, including Don Rickles as Mr. Potato Head and Wallace Shawn as a meek dinosaur. The director-animator won a special Oscar for "the development and inspired application of techniques that have made possible the first feature-length computer-animated film." In other words, the movie is great. --Doug Thomas Review: BONUS FEATURES on 2-Disc Special Edition are Great, including a commentary track! - This is a fabulous movie. It has everything going for it, a great storyline, great acting, great animation! I decided to replace our VHS with a DVD and am very glad that I spent a little extra for this 2010 Special Edition re-issue of this 1995 classic. When you go to the Bonus Features Menu, the Commentary track is listed as the second extra, but I'm going to cover it first. I've listened to a lot of Audio Commentary tracks (you watch the movie, and they are commenting while the movie is in progress about what's happening) and I really enjoyed this one. Participants in the commentary: John Lasseter (director and co-writer), Andrew Stanton (co-writer), Pete Doctor (supervising animator), Ralph Eggleston (art director), Bill Reeves (supervising technical director), Bonnie Arnold (co-producer), Ralph Guggenheim (co-producer). The first thing they talked about, because it's the introduction that sets the stage for the whole movie, is the beginning song by Randy Newman, "You've Got a Friend in Me". As Bonnie says, the movie's "songs actually told about an emotional moment in the film, [rather than] the character singing about those things." It's a shortcut, and very effective, for giving the audience all the background it needs to understand what happens when Buzz Lightyear interlopes. The movie has a mix of real-life toys and made-up toys. For the real-life toys, they had to receive permission to use them in the movie. As one man said, "The hours I spent on the phone with Mr. Potato Head's lawyer, just trying to work out the use of Mr. Potato Head in our movie." It was no small thing for the image-conscious manufacturer. When we first meet Sid, the toy torturer next door, he is about to blow up a Combat Carl infantryman. They had really wanted to use G.I. Joe, but Hasbro refused the rights to use Joe if they were going to blow him up. And speaking of soldiers, I think we all love the green plastic soldiers, marching while attached to their little stands. And we are so wrapped up in the movie that we can, as a commenter says, "suspend disbelief" so far that it seems logical that the sergeant can actually see through his green plastic binoculars. Remember when they're trying to rescue Buzz by using a ladder made from the "Barrel of Monkies" game? The line "We need more monkies!" always cracks me up. And they started using it around the studio. When they needed another person for a job it was "We need more monkies!" Lastly, you may have to listen to the commentary to answer these questions: What is "The Big Cheat"? Where do you need to know Morse Code? Can you catch all the homages made to the creators' favorite movies? Here are the Bonus Features on the DVD disc of this great Toy Story (Two-Disc Special Edition Blu-ray/DVD Combo in Blu-ray Packaging) : 1. "Toy Story3: Sneak Peek" (2:02 minutes) This is a preview-like short where "Toy Story 3" director, Lee Unkrich, gives us a peek for the then-forthcoming 3rd movie. TS3 was released in Nov. 2010, while the Special Editions of 1 & 2 were released in March 2010. 2. Audio Commentary 3. "Buzz Lightyear Mission Logs: Episode 1: Blast Off" (3:27) This is a great little introduction to the space shuttle and space station, with lots of real on-location footage provided by NASA. It looks like a Buzz Lightyear figure actually made it into space on the Discovery! 4. "Paths to Pixar - Artists" (4:49) Four people tell how they got to Pixar and where they worked on "Toy Story". Tia Crater tells, "When I started I had a business card that said 'Tia Crater - Imperfectionist'. Because it was my job to mess up everything that was created so perfectly in the films". In other words, smooth hair to be messed, etc. 5. "Studio Stories: John's Car" (1:27) The three studio stories are great. They are like storyboard clip reels with cute simple graphics. This first one is about director John Lasseter's car, called the "death box car" - over 500,000 miles and looked every inch of those miles. Narrated by Glen McQueen and Darla K. Anderson. 6. "Studio Stories: Baby AJ" (1:38) Narrated by A.J. Rieble. A J tells how he won the Halloween costume contest one year. Truly above and beyond the call of duty! 7. "Studio Stories: Scooter Races" (2:16) In 1991, Pixar was a small company and they'd just moved into a big building that had lots of empty space. They started riding motorized scooters for fun and then they started racing. And then the racing got very fierce. Very funny short, narrated by Pete Doctor and Andrew Stanton. 8. "Buzz Takes Manhattan" (2:13) In 2008, Buzz Lightyear was a giant balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. It was a dream come true for John Lasseter, who by this time was the Chief Creative Officer for Pixar & Disney Animation. Lasseter and Roger Gould (now Creative Director for Pixar Theme Parks) star in these movie clips about raising and pulling the balloon. As Lasseter says, "He was MEANT to be a balloon, cause he was FLYING!" 9. "Black Friday: The Toy Story You never Saw" (7:36) This extra makes the Special Edition totally worth it. Wow. This is the very beginning, where Pixar was storyboarding "Toy Story", to be the very first full-length future done 100% on the computer. Everything had to go through Disney. Disney kept wanting multiple changes, and, in particular, Jeffrey Katzenberg "would rip them apart". He wanted the story more edgy, more cynical and more adult. John Lasseter explains how the Pixar crew finally went down to Disney with about half the movie storyboarded into a movie with voice acting (though not by the actors who would be hired to do the final film)- the way they thought Disney wanted it. The character of Woody took the brunt of the rewrite, becoming unappealing and even mean. Lassiter cringes and covers his face in his hands as he introduces part of the reel that was showed Disney on what they dubbed "Black Friday". You will not believe it when you see it. It is mean-spirited and something you might see on [adult swim], but not a Pixar-Disney movie. Pixar hated it, and so did Disney. Disney tried to shut them down, but Lasseter pleaded for two weeks reprieve while they reworked the story. In two weeks, in a giant collective of brains and enthusiasm, PIxar totally redid "Toy Story" the way they wanted it, and came up with the start of the movie that we now know and love. Commenters in this short include these people, showing their current titles, not their titles as they worked on "Toy Story": John Lasseter (Chief Creative Officer for Pixar & Disney Animation) , Ed Catmull (President of Pixar & Disney Animation), Pete Doctor (director "Up"), Joe Ranft (co-director "Cars"), Thomas Schumacher (former President Walt Disney Animation), Andrew Stanton (director "Wall-E"). 10. "Learn How to Take Your Favorite Movies on the Go" (1:00) This is an ad for digital files of Disney movies. Great extras for a movie that is timeless. This Special Edition for "Toy Story" came out the same time as the Special Edition for "Toy Story 2". Toy Story 2 (Two-Disc Special Edition Blu-ray/DVD Combo w/ Blu-ray Packaging) Many of the Bonus extras on the TS2 issue compliment the extras on "Toy Story". For example, there are three different Studio Stories, Episode 2 of Buzz's Mission Log, and a "Paths to Pixar" that covers the technical artists. Highly recommended! Happy Reader Review: Never gets old - Always a hit with the kids

| ASIN | B0030IIZ4M |
| Actors | Don Rickles, Jim Varney, Tim Allen, Tom Hanks, Wallace Shawn |
| Aspect Ratio | 1.78:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #605 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #60 in Kids & Family DVDs |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (22,736) |
| Director | John Lasseter |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | 323300 |
| Language | English (Dolby Digital 5.1 EX), English (Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 5.1), Unqualified |
| MPAA rating | G (General Audience) |
| Media Format | NTSC |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Product Dimensions | 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 0.01 ounces |
| Release date | May 11, 2010 |
| Run time | 1 hour and 20 minutes |
| Studio | DISNEY/PIXAR |
| Subtitles: | French |
| Writers | Alec Sokolow, Andrew Stanton, Joel Cohen, Joss Whedon |
H**R
BONUS FEATURES on 2-Disc Special Edition are Great, including a commentary track!
This is a fabulous movie. It has everything going for it, a great storyline, great acting, great animation! I decided to replace our VHS with a DVD and am very glad that I spent a little extra for this 2010 Special Edition re-issue of this 1995 classic. When you go to the Bonus Features Menu, the Commentary track is listed as the second extra, but I'm going to cover it first. I've listened to a lot of Audio Commentary tracks (you watch the movie, and they are commenting while the movie is in progress about what's happening) and I really enjoyed this one. Participants in the commentary: John Lasseter (director and co-writer), Andrew Stanton (co-writer), Pete Doctor (supervising animator), Ralph Eggleston (art director), Bill Reeves (supervising technical director), Bonnie Arnold (co-producer), Ralph Guggenheim (co-producer). The first thing they talked about, because it's the introduction that sets the stage for the whole movie, is the beginning song by Randy Newman, "You've Got a Friend in Me". As Bonnie says, the movie's "songs actually told about an emotional moment in the film, [rather than] the character singing about those things." It's a shortcut, and very effective, for giving the audience all the background it needs to understand what happens when Buzz Lightyear interlopes. The movie has a mix of real-life toys and made-up toys. For the real-life toys, they had to receive permission to use them in the movie. As one man said, "The hours I spent on the phone with Mr. Potato Head's lawyer, just trying to work out the use of Mr. Potato Head in our movie." It was no small thing for the image-conscious manufacturer. When we first meet Sid, the toy torturer next door, he is about to blow up a Combat Carl infantryman. They had really wanted to use G.I. Joe, but Hasbro refused the rights to use Joe if they were going to blow him up. And speaking of soldiers, I think we all love the green plastic soldiers, marching while attached to their little stands. And we are so wrapped up in the movie that we can, as a commenter says, "suspend disbelief" so far that it seems logical that the sergeant can actually see through his green plastic binoculars. Remember when they're trying to rescue Buzz by using a ladder made from the "Barrel of Monkies" game? The line "We need more monkies!" always cracks me up. And they started using it around the studio. When they needed another person for a job it was "We need more monkies!" Lastly, you may have to listen to the commentary to answer these questions: What is "The Big Cheat"? Where do you need to know Morse Code? Can you catch all the homages made to the creators' favorite movies? Here are the Bonus Features on the DVD disc of this great Toy Story (Two-Disc Special Edition Blu-ray/DVD Combo in Blu-ray Packaging) : 1. "Toy Story3: Sneak Peek" (2:02 minutes) This is a preview-like short where "Toy Story 3" director, Lee Unkrich, gives us a peek for the then-forthcoming 3rd movie. TS3 was released in Nov. 2010, while the Special Editions of 1 & 2 were released in March 2010. 2. Audio Commentary 3. "Buzz Lightyear Mission Logs: Episode 1: Blast Off" (3:27) This is a great little introduction to the space shuttle and space station, with lots of real on-location footage provided by NASA. It looks like a Buzz Lightyear figure actually made it into space on the Discovery! 4. "Paths to Pixar - Artists" (4:49) Four people tell how they got to Pixar and where they worked on "Toy Story". Tia Crater tells, "When I started I had a business card that said 'Tia Crater - Imperfectionist'. Because it was my job to mess up everything that was created so perfectly in the films". In other words, smooth hair to be messed, etc. 5. "Studio Stories: John's Car" (1:27) The three studio stories are great. They are like storyboard clip reels with cute simple graphics. This first one is about director John Lasseter's car, called the "death box car" - over 500,000 miles and looked every inch of those miles. Narrated by Glen McQueen and Darla K. Anderson. 6. "Studio Stories: Baby AJ" (1:38) Narrated by A.J. Rieble. A J tells how he won the Halloween costume contest one year. Truly above and beyond the call of duty! 7. "Studio Stories: Scooter Races" (2:16) In 1991, Pixar was a small company and they'd just moved into a big building that had lots of empty space. They started riding motorized scooters for fun and then they started racing. And then the racing got very fierce. Very funny short, narrated by Pete Doctor and Andrew Stanton. 8. "Buzz Takes Manhattan" (2:13) In 2008, Buzz Lightyear was a giant balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. It was a dream come true for John Lasseter, who by this time was the Chief Creative Officer for Pixar & Disney Animation. Lasseter and Roger Gould (now Creative Director for Pixar Theme Parks) star in these movie clips about raising and pulling the balloon. As Lasseter says, "He was MEANT to be a balloon, cause he was FLYING!" 9. "Black Friday: The Toy Story You never Saw" (7:36) This extra makes the Special Edition totally worth it. Wow. This is the very beginning, where Pixar was storyboarding "Toy Story", to be the very first full-length future done 100% on the computer. Everything had to go through Disney. Disney kept wanting multiple changes, and, in particular, Jeffrey Katzenberg "would rip them apart". He wanted the story more edgy, more cynical and more adult. John Lasseter explains how the Pixar crew finally went down to Disney with about half the movie storyboarded into a movie with voice acting (though not by the actors who would be hired to do the final film)- the way they thought Disney wanted it. The character of Woody took the brunt of the rewrite, becoming unappealing and even mean. Lassiter cringes and covers his face in his hands as he introduces part of the reel that was showed Disney on what they dubbed "Black Friday". You will not believe it when you see it. It is mean-spirited and something you might see on [adult swim], but not a Pixar-Disney movie. Pixar hated it, and so did Disney. Disney tried to shut them down, but Lasseter pleaded for two weeks reprieve while they reworked the story. In two weeks, in a giant collective of brains and enthusiasm, PIxar totally redid "Toy Story" the way they wanted it, and came up with the start of the movie that we now know and love. Commenters in this short include these people, showing their current titles, not their titles as they worked on "Toy Story": John Lasseter (Chief Creative Officer for Pixar & Disney Animation) , Ed Catmull (President of Pixar & Disney Animation), Pete Doctor (director "Up"), Joe Ranft (co-director "Cars"), Thomas Schumacher (former President Walt Disney Animation), Andrew Stanton (director "Wall-E"). 10. "Learn How to Take Your Favorite Movies on the Go" (1:00) This is an ad for digital files of Disney movies. Great extras for a movie that is timeless. This Special Edition for "Toy Story" came out the same time as the Special Edition for "Toy Story 2". Toy Story 2 (Two-Disc Special Edition Blu-ray/DVD Combo w/ Blu-ray Packaging) Many of the Bonus extras on the TS2 issue compliment the extras on "Toy Story". For example, there are three different Studio Stories, Episode 2 of Buzz's Mission Log, and a "Paths to Pixar" that covers the technical artists. Highly recommended! Happy Reader
J**N
Never gets old
Always a hit with the kids
J**N
Good
Oldiie but goody, kids favorite
S**H
Worth it for ten or twenty. It doesn't really matter.
I can't believe this was on sale for only $10 dollars. I got Finding Nemo the same way, and it blows my mind these movies go that low. A timeless classic that I can watch with my four year old son multiple times and not go crazy, same with Nemo. These are those movies that if you have a young child, you might as well just buy it. You'll watch it enough to get your money's worth. If you rent it once, I guarantee it won't be the last. I hope this review helps, have a great day!
D**E
Pixar's first animated film continues to be one of the best!!!
Computer animation has grown so rapidly in the last years that it's easy to forget which movie was responsible for this boom in the field. Toy Story, much like Snow White before it opened a whole new world of opportunities for animation all around the world. Nowadays, most studios has their own Animation Department that mainly produces computer animated films. Being the forefather computer animated movies makes this movie important but what makes it a true masterpiece is that after all this years and countless of other animated films, Toy Story still holds up pretty well and is still one of the best animated films of all time. Most of you must be familiar with the story so I will write a very short synopsi¨s: Woody, a cowboy doll has been Andy's favorite since forever. He is not only the favorite toy but also the leader of all the toys in Andy's room. Everyone looks up to him and he is both respected and admired. When Andy's birthday comes, his mom gives him a new cool toy: Buzz Lightyear a space ranger who is the greatest toy ever. Buzz does not realize he is a toy but truly believes he is a space ranger. With the new toy in the room, Woody feels neglected and does something that he later regrets. He and Buzz end in a sadistic kid's house named Sid and both will have to trust each other in order to return safely to Andy's room. Toy Story is such a pleasure to watch because it has an accesible interesting story and great characters. Woody and Buzz are excellent characters playing opposites and the rest of the toys are hilarious. John Lasseter & Co. truly created a special film. It amazes me that all the jokes are still funny and the movie does not feel dated at all. This is a true classic. Video & Audio: Toy Story comes to BD looking absolutely flawless. The HD transfer is inmaculate, detail is crisp and contrast is amazing. Colors are well reproduced and you can spot a lot of things that were impossible to see on SD. The HD also brings some limits in the animation and some of it does look dated (for example Scud, Sid's dog) but I think that's part of the charm of the film. A spectacular transfer. The 5.1 DTS-HD MA is also amazing with no signs of compression or other anomalies; it's also very strong and dynamic. Bonus Features: New to the BD are some goodies: "Buzz Lightyear Mission Logs: Blast Off", a NASA educating program featuring Buzz, Hamm and Rex. "Paths to Pixar: Artists" an excellent featurette featuring Pixar's animators and how they started at Pixar. Then you have three studio stories that give great insight of how Pixar is with anecdotes and jokes. "Buzz takes Manhattan" features the Buzz ballon in the Thanksgiving Macy's parade. "Black Friday: The Toy Story You Never Saw" is an excellent piece where the filmmakers reflect on the original concept and how bad it was. I think we are all glad they scrap that story. After that you hev carry overs from previous releases: an audio commentary, a making of featurette, and many short featurettes that deals with the legacy of the film, the design, the story, the production and more. A gallery and trailers close up the disc. A DVD copy is also included. Closing Thoughts: Toy Story is very important in the animation world but it's also still relevant, hilarious, heartfelt and a true masterpiece. This BD features truly amazing video & audio and a lot of bonus material as such comes with THE HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION!!!
A**7
About The Movie
I just like the fact that toys come alive and Woody and Buzz, who were enemies, became friends and worked together to put things right. Woody and Buzz fighting and arguing at Pizza Planet was very funny, too. Woody is my favorite character for being jealous of Buzz and being the leader of all the toys in some situations.
Q**Q
大人になってから登場した作品だったため、トイストーリーという言葉は知っていたものの 最初から「子供向け」だと決めつけて作品自体は観たことがありませんでしたが、 時折トイストーリーのキャラの話をする人が居るため勉強のために観てみたところ、 すごく凝っていて面白くて感動しました。今更ではありますが、 子供向けとか固定観念を持たずにもっと早くに観ておけばよかったです。
H**E
Un grand classique à avoir ;-)
P**D
As John Lasseter clearly explains in the extras documentary, looking behind the making of Toy Story, the reason for the films continued praise and success lays soley behind the story. We've now entered an age were computers are pumping out films every week, and you only have to look at the commercials to see 'yet another' computer anim. The problem? Theirs nothing special about the films anymore. Toy Story was an idea developed in 1992 by Lasseter, who got the idea of a film from a toys perspective after his short animation 'Tin Toy'. And even though he knew the technology behind the animation would be the main reason for its success, the story was what he was most concerned about. Woody (Tom Hanks) has been the favourite toy of a young boy named Andy since he himself was at kindergarden, and a power struggle develops as a brand new toy called 'Buzz Lightyear' - the main character from TV programme, is Andy's main present for his birthday. The flashy spaceman makes Woody look his age, and he soon realises he's becoming forgotten by his owner. In the height of jealousy, things go wrong, and so Woody and Buzz find themselves on their own adventure if they both want stay in Andys life... at least thats Woody's main concern, as Buzz is still dillusional and doesnt realise he's a toy... The film develops Buzz and Woody's friendship and they soon learn to get on, and the musical score captures the theme of these moments beautifully. Admittedly, Toy Story 2 captures an unbeliveable amount of detail in the animation at times, but this is still a landmark in animating history. Its heartwarming story continues to entertain me and my family, and the songs will always be a part of your memory. At just under 9 pounds, its excellent value (for a Disney DVD!) as the bonus disc has plenty of interesting extras. A absloute must for the family, and still the best computer anim to date.
A**R
very entertaining
D**"
Frühling 1996 saß ein, damals 7 jähriger, Junge mit seiner Familie im Kino. Vor Aufregung völlig wibbelig, war es doch nicht nur einer seiner ersten Kinobesuche, sondern auch noch ein Film in dem es genau um das gehen sollte was sich jedes Kind in seinem Alter ausmalte, wenn man seine Spielsachen im Kinderzimmer zurück ließ. Was treiben die kleinen Kumpanen, die durch die Fantasie der Kinder bei Zeiten doch so lebendig wirken, wenn der kleine Racker grade nicht zum Spielen zu gegen ist? Der kleine Junge war natürlich ich. Und der Film der im Kino lief nachdem die Lichter abgedunkelt wurden hieß: TOY STORY. Wow! Mehr kann ich auch heute, nach, kaum fassbaren, 14 Jahren, nicht sagen, wenn ich mir Toy Story ansehe. Wenn man sich Wall-E oder Oben, sowie alle anderen Meisterwerke aus der Anmationsschmiede Pixar anschaut, dann ist es wirklich erstaunlich wozu die Computeranimation heute gebracht werden kann. Und doch bleibt Toy Story für mich das größte Meisterwerk von allen. Der Film wirkt heute noch genauso frisch, verzaubernd und berührend wie in jenem Frühling, als Toy Story als erster abendfüllender, komplett am Computer entstandener, Kinofilm über die Leinwand flimmerte. Die, im Vergleich zu den neueren Produktionen, logische technische simplere Optik tut dem ganzen nicht den geringsten Abbruch, denn selbst heute sieht man dem Film den großen Aufwand und die Liebe zum Detail in der Animation an und das, was den Film wirklich zum Leben erweckt, sind nach wie vor die liebenswerten und charaktervollen Figuren des Films, allen voran natürlich das ungleiche Duo Woody und Buzz. Lange habe ich gewartet, dass Toy Story auch endlich seinen Weg auf das hochauflösende Medium schafft und endlich ist es soweit. Und die Blu-Ray enttäuscht nicht. Das Bild ist unglaublich. Konturen sind absolut gestochen scharf und die Farben sahen nie kraftvoller aus. Auch was die Extras angeht, bietet diese Veröffentlichung allerhand nett gemachte und informative Dokumentationen und Kurzbeiträge. Auch für die kleineren sind einige nette Videos vorhanden. Für mich, als Nostalgiker und Fan der ersten Stunde, hätte ich mir vielleicht noch ein wenig mehr zur damaligen Produktion des Films gewünscht, aber was das angeht muss man sagen, dass die Dokumentation "Die Pixar Story" , die auf der Wall-E Blu-Ray zu finden ist, diesen Punkt mehr als grandios abdeckt und für alle Freunde des Animationsfilms und vor allem von Pixar, ein Must-See ist! Lohnt sich der Kauf? Nun, wenn man Animationsfilme mag, JA! Toy Story stellt einen echten Meilenstein in diesem Bereich dar und hat dem Genre eine echte Steilvorlage gegeben, das, zum Glück, bis heute, eine überdurchschnittliche gute Quote an tollen Filmen vorzeigen kann. Wenn man einfach gute Filme mit toller Geschichte mag, JA! Toy Story begeistert mit erwachsenen, lebensechten Charakteren und einer mitreißende Geschichte um Freundschaft und Vertrauen. Wenn man ein HiDef Fan ist und nach neuem Vorzeige Material sucht, JA! Bild und Ton können einen echt umhauen, vor allem im Bereich Bild. Der Ton ist im englischen etwas räumlicher und kräftiger als die deutsche Tonspur, und im Vergleich zu neueren Produktionen noch eher zurückhalten, weiß aber in den richtigen Momenten gezielt aufzufahren und auch sonst ist die Abmischung mehr als gut. Fazit: Alle die den Film damals gesehen und lieben gelernt haben werden wohl sowieso zuschlagen, aber auch alle die bisher noch nichts von Toy Story gehört oder gesehen haben (und die gibt's, vor allem in der jüngeren Generation), sollten den Film nicht aufgrund seines Alters ignorieren oder verpassen. Ich garantiere, dass auch Toy Story auch heute noch kleine Kinder so begeistern kann wie mich damals vor 14 Jahren.
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